Chapter 7: Architecture Design Omar Meqdadi SE 273 Lecture 7 Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering University of Wisconsin-Platteville.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 7: Architecture Design Omar Meqdadi SE 273 Lecture 7 Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering University of Wisconsin-Platteville

2 Topics covered Architectural design decisions System organisation Decomposition styles

3 Software architecture The design process for identifying the sub-systems making up a system and the framework for sub-system control and communication is architectural design. The output of this design process is a description of the software architecture.

4 Architectural design An early stage of the system design process. Represents the link between specification and design processes. Often carried out in parallel with some specification activities. It involves identifying major system components and their communications.

5 Advantages of explicit architecture Stakeholder communication  Architecture may be used as a focus of discussion by system stakeholders. System analysis  Means that analysis of whether the system can meet its non-functional requirements is possible. Large-scale reuse  The architecture may be reusable across a range of systems.

6 Architecture and system characteristics Performance  Localize critical operations and minimize communications. Use large rather than fine-grain components. Security  Use a layered architecture with critical assets in the inner layers. Safety  Localize safety-critical features in a small number of sub-systems. Availability  Include redundant components and mechanisms for fault tolerance. Maintainability  Use fine-grain, replaceable components.

7 Architectural conflicts Using large-grain components improves performance but reduces maintainability. Introducing redundant data improves availability but makes security more difficult. Localising safety-related features usually means more communication so degraded performance.

8 System structuring Concerned with decomposing the system into interacting sub-systems. The architectural design  is expressed as a block diagram  presenting an overview of the system structure. More specific models showing how sub-systems  share data  distributed and interface with each other.

9 Packing robot control system

10 Architectural styles The architectural model of a system may conform to a generic architectural model or style. An awareness of these styles can simplify the problem of defining system architectures. However, most large systems are heterogeneous and do not follow a single architectural style.

11 Architectural models Used to document an architectural design. Static structural model that shows the major system components. Dynamic process model that shows the process structure of the system. Interface model that defines sub-system interfaces. Relationships model such as a data-flow model that shows sub- system relationships. Distribution model that shows how sub-systems are distributed across computers.

12 System organisation Reflects the basic strategy that is used to structure a system. Three organisational styles are widely used:  A shared data repository style;  A shared services and servers style;  An abstract machine or layered style.

13 The repository model Sub-systems must exchange data. This may be done in two ways:  Shared data is held in a central database or repository and may be accessed by all sub-systems;  Each sub-system maintains its own database and passes data explicitly to other sub-systems. When large amounts of data are to be shared, the repository model of sharing is most commonly used.

14 CASE toolset architecture

15 Repository model characteristics Advantages  Efficient way to share large amounts of data;  Sub-systems need not be concerned with how data is produced Centralised management e.g. backup, security, etc.  Sharing model is published as the repository schema. Disadvantages  Sub-systems must agree on a repository data model. Inevitably a compromise;  Data evolution is difficult and expensive;  No scope for specific management policies;  Difficult to distribute efficiently.

16 Client-server model Distributed system model which shows how data and processing is distributed across a range of components. Set of stand-alone servers which provide specific services such as printing, data management, etc. Set of clients which call on these services. Network which allows clients to access servers.

17 Film and picture library

18 Client-server characteristics Advantages  Distribution of data is straightforward;  Makes effective use of networked systems. May require cheaper hardware;  Easy to add new servers or upgrade existing servers. Disadvantages  No shared data model so sub-systems use different data organisation. Data interchange may be inefficient;  Redundant management in each server;  No central register of names and services - it may be hard to find out what servers and services are available.

19 Abstract machine (layered) model Used to model the interfacing of sub-systems. Organises the system into a set of layers (or abstract machines) each of which provide a set of services. Supports the incremental development of sub-systems in different layers. When a layer interface changes, only the adjacent layer is affected. However, often artificial to structure systems in this way.

20 Version management system

21 Modular decomposition styles Styles of decomposing sub-systems into modules. No rigid distinction between system organization and modular decomposition.

22 Sub-systems and modules A sub-system is a system in its own right whose operation is independent of the services provided by other sub- systems. A module is a system component that provides services to other components but would not normally be considered as a separate system.

23 Modular decomposition Another structural level where sub-systems are decomposed into modules. Two modular decomposition models covered  An object model where the system is decomposed into interacting object;  A pipeline or data-flow model where the system is decomposed into functional modules which transform inputs to outputs. If possible, decisions about concurrency should be delayed until modules are implemented.

24 Function-oriented pipelining Functional transformations process their inputs to produce outputs. May be referred to as a pipe and filter model (as in UNIX shell). Variants of this approach are very common. When transformations are sequential, this is a batch sequential model which is extensively used in data processing systems. Not really suitable for interactive systems.

25 Invoice processing system

26 Pipeline model advantages Supports transformation reuse. Intuitive organisation for stakeholder communication. Easy to add new transformations. Relatively simple to implement as either a concurrent or sequential system. However, requires a common format for data transfer along the pipeline and difficult to support event-based interaction.